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Lando Norris and Max Verstappen tied for the most pole positions during 2024. They continued their rivalry as the McLaren driver claimed the honours for the opening race of 2024.

But for F1’s six new full-time drivers the first qualifying session of the season marked a significant moment. And only one of them – the reigning Formula 2 champion – put one over their more experienced team mate.

Teams’ improvement from practice to qualifying

As noted yesterday, Red Bull were far from their 2024 pace on the first day of practice in Melbourne. It was therefore no surprise Verstappen quickly got closer to his car’s true pace in final practice and was in the hunt for pole position.

McLaren looked difficult to beat, however. Red Bull team principal Christian Horner reckoned there was only another tenth of a second in their car.

Besides Red Bull, another team which made a significant step forwards from Friday to Saturday was Mercedes. They had difficulty getting the best from the soft tyres yesterday, but clearly found answers overnight, and George Russell was also in the hunt for pole position.

The biggest surprise of Saturday, however, was surely Ferrari, who made the smallest step from day to day. They seemed to particularly struggle as the temperatures rose during qualifying.

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Gaps between team mates

Only one of the six newcomers to the grid managed to out-qualify their more experienced team mate. Take a bow, Gabriel Bortoleto, who beat Nico Hulkenberg, a veteran of 227 grands prix, by six-hundredths of a second in Q1. It was enough to earn him a place in Q2.

Bortoleto said the first part of qualifying “went smoothly” for him. “We put everything together and made the cut. I think making it into Q2 in my first-ever qualifying is definitely not bad.”

However he had a lurid moment in Q2 when the car nearly got away from him in turn four. “I wanted to give it a shot at Q3 and pushed a little too hard on my lap,” he admitted. “I still managed to keep the car on track, but it didn’t really make sense to try again. Still, I think we can be quite satisfied with the job done today.”

Several of the new drivers had substantial deficits to their team mates, but there were mitigating factors associated with the largest of those. Liam Lawson was on course to improve when he went off, Jack Doohan was disadvantaged by being unable to use his DRS because Lewis Hamilton had spun off in front of him, and Andrea Kimi Antonelli damaged his floor.

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NB. Oliver Bearman did not set at time

Team mate battles

Fernando Alonso also had floor damage, but F1’s most experienced driver still managed to out-qualify his team mate. He extended his streak of races in which he’s beaten Lance Stroll, which is the longest such run of anyone on the grid.

Last year, Lewis Hamilton was beaten by team mate George Russell at Mercedes, and he wasn’t surprised to find himself behind Charles Leclerc after their first qualifying session together. However Ferrari’s new driver said he was “pleased” to be as close as he was.

DriverConsecutive qualifying wins
Fernando Alonso13
Yuki Tsunoda9
Lando Norris8
Max Verstappen8
George Russell7
DriverConsecutive qualifying losses
Lance Stroll13
Liam Lawson9
Oscar Piastri8
Lewis Hamilton7

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Q3 appearances

George Russell has the longest run of consecutive Q3 appearances at present. He last failed to reach Q3 at the Hungarian Grand Prix when he dropped out in Q1.

DriverConsecutive Q3 appearances
George Russell12
Lando Norris8
Oscar Piastri5
Max Verstappen4
Carlos Sainz Jnr4
Pierre Gasly2

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2025 Australian Grand Prix

Browse all 2025 Australian Grand Prix articles

In issuing a classy response to Red Bull motorsport advisor Helmut Marko branding him as only a “B” calibre driver, Sauber rookie Gabriel Bortoleto has continued his strong start to life in the Formula 1 media spotlight.

Two weeks ago in the Bahrain test, Bortoleto was frank but angst-less in discussing how restrictions on F1’s Testing of Previous Cars (TPC) rule – cut to 1,000km over just four days and split across both drivers in a team – means he arrives as one of the least prepared drivers in the championship’s history given the ongoing restriction on pre- and in-season testing.

By comparison, seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton was able to log nearly 5,000 miles of running in older and then current machinery ahead of his F1 bow in 2007.

Some of Bortoleto’s deficit stems from his late signing for Sauber in November 2024 – as it meant he did not complete lengthy TPC programmes such as those run by Alpine for Jack Doohan ahead of his F1 graduation.

Now in Melbourne for the 2025 season opener after speaking eloquently on one niggling matter for rookie drivers in Bahrain, Bortoleto had to confront another in being questioned on the barbs of Marko.

Appearing on Red Bull’s in-house broadcaster ServusTV on Monday, Marko was asked to grade the five 2025 rookies other than Liam Lawson.

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing, Helmut Marko, Red Bull Racing

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing, Helmut Marko, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

He declared Andrea Kimi Antonelli and Haas driver Oliver Bearman as “A” drivers – albeit with caveats regarding pressure on the former in debuting in F1 with Mercedes and a question about the risks he views as the latter often taking – and gave the same ‘grade’ to new Racing Bulls driver Isack Hadjar.

Marko dismissed Alpine’s Jack Doohan – another Red Bull junior between 2017-2021 – as a “C driver – I don’t think he’ll complete the full season” and gave Bortoleto just one grade higher.

“I’d rate him a B driver,” said Marko. “He’s a very intelligent racer – he won the Formula 3 championship [in 2023], but with only one victory. He tends to stay out of trouble.

“In Formula 2, he had only two wins. He’s a driver who brings the car home, has a solid grasp of strategy and tyre management, but I don’t see that ultimate speed in him.”

When these comments were put to Bortoleto in Melbourne, he replied: “I don’t care. I’ve seen that and I love challenges.

“Hearing that from Helmut – he’s a guy who has put a lot of talent in Formula 1 and has put a lot of wrong talents in F1. So, you can see he got it right and wrong and hopefully I will prove him wrong.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team, Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team, Carlos Sainz, Williams, Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team, Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team, Carlos Sainz, Williams, Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

“But nothing I say now in the media will change his mind – just my results on track. I’m sure I’ll prove him wrong at some point and hopefully he will admit this.

“For now, I’m just focusing on doing my job and improving and doing the best I can. I’m proud of what I did in the junior series and I won in F2 and F3 against the Red Bull drivers he has, so good for me.”

Also speaking in Melbourne was Fernando Alonso – who has Bortoleto signed to his A14 management company.

While not asked about Marko’s comments, Alonso instead opined again on Bortoleto’s “dedication and his professionalism towards racing” – after being full of praise for his charge late in 2024.

“[That] has been probably the most impressive thing,” Alonso added. “Since day one, he was very committed to work hard for his dreams – already in FRECA but then in Formula 3 and then Formula 2, each race was very well prepared and a very mature approach.

“I think he deserves to be in Formula 1 and hopefully [has] a long career here and [is] successful. He has been the best rookie of this next generation that we see so many rookies [coming] into F1 this year.

“He has been the best of them, so [although] maybe he doesn’t have the car at the moment to match their results the first year, hopefully people don’t forget what he did in the last two.”

With track action in Melbourne under a day away, Bortoleto doesn’t have long to wait in his quiet quest to prove one of F1’s biggest talkers wrong.

Photos from Australian GP – Thursday

Read Also:

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Gabriel Bortoleto

Sauber

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

In issuing a classy response to Red Bull motorsport advisor Helmut Marko branding him as only a “B” calibre driver, Sauber rookie Gabriel Bortoleto has continued his strong start to life in the Formula 1 media spotlight glare.

Two weeks ago in the Bahrain test, Bortoleto was frank but angst-less in discussing how restrictions on F1’s Testing of Previous Cars (TPC) rule – cut to 1,000km over just four days and split across both drivers in a team – means he arrives as one of the least prepared drivers in the championship’s history given the ongoing restriction on pre- and in-season testing.

By comparison, seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton was able to log nearly 5,000 miles of running in older and then current machinery ahead of his F1 bow in 2007.

Some of Bortoleto’s deficit stems from his late signing for Sauber in November 2024 – as it meant he did not complete lengthy TPC programmes such as those run by Alpine for Jack Doohan ahead of his F1 graduation.

Now on the ground in Melbourne for the 2025 season opener after speaking eloquently on one niggling matter for rookie drivers in Bahrain, Bortoleto had to confront another in being questioned on the barbs of Marko.

Appearing on Red Bull’s in-house broadcaster ServusTV on Monday, Marko was asked to grade the five 2025 rookies other than Liam Lawson.

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing, Helmut Marko, Red Bull Racing

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing, Helmut Marko, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

He declared Andrea Kimi Antonelli and Haas driver Oliver Bearman as “A” drivers – albeit with caveats regarding pressure on the former in debuting in F1 with Mercedes and a question about the risks he views as the latter often taking – and gave the same ‘grade’ to new Racing Bulls driver Isack Hadjar.

Marko dismissed Alpine’s Jack Doohan – another Red Bull junior between 2017-2021 – as a “C driver – I don’t think he’ll complete the full season” and gave Bortoleto just one grade higher.

“I’d rate him a B driver,” said Marko. “He’s a very intelligent racer – he won the Formula 3 championship [in 2023], but with only one victory. He tends to stay out of trouble.

“In Formula 2, he had only two wins. He’s a driver who brings the car home, has a solid grasp of strategy and tyre management, but I don’t see that ultimate speed in him.”

When these comments were put to Bortoleto in Melbourne, he replied: “I don’t care. I’ve seen that and I love challenges.

“Hearing that from Helmut – he’s a guy who has put a lot of talent in Formula 1 and has put a lot of wrong talents in F1. So, you can see he got it right and wrong and hopefully I will prove him wrong.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team, Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team, Carlos Sainz, Williams, Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team, Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team, Carlos Sainz, Williams, Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

“But nothing I say now in the media will change his mind – just my results on track. I’m sure I’ll prove him wrong at some point and hopefully he will admit this.

“For now, I’m just focussing on doing my job and improving and doing the best I can. I’m proud of what I did in the junior series and I won in F2 and F3 against the Red Bull drivers he has, so good for me.”

Also speaking in Melbourne was Fernando Alonso – who has Bortoleto signed to his A14 management company.

While not asked about Marko’s comments, Alonso instead opined again on Bortoleto’s “dedication and his professionalism towards racing” – after being full of praise for his charge late in 2024.

“[That] has been probably the most impressive thing,” Alonso added. “Since day one, he was very committed to work hard for his dreams – already in FRECA but then in Formula 3 and then Formula 2, each race was very well prepared and a very mature approach.

“I think he deserves to be in Formula 1 and hopefully [has] a long career here and [is] successful. He has been the best rookie of this next generation that we see so many rookies [coming] into F1 this year.

“He has been the best of them, so [although] maybe he doesn’t have the car at the moment to match their results the first year, hopefully people don’t forget what he did in the last two.”

With track sessions in Melbourne now under a day away, Bortoleto doesn’t have long to wait in his quiet quest to prove one of F1’s biggest talkers wrong.

Read Also:

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Gabriel Bortoleto

Sauber

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

In the first of a new mini-series where Autosport is delving into the burgeoning Formula 1 careers of the six 2025 rookies, today we’re introducing new Sauber driver Gabriel Bortoleto.

The 20-year-old hails from Sao Paulo and has already built an impressive junior motorsport career.

Like Charles Leclerc, George Russell and Oscar Piastri before him, Bortoleto arrives at the top tier having won back-to-back Formula 3 (known as GP3 when Leclerc and Russell won this title) and Formula 2 championships at the first attempt.

Before then, he produced decent returns in Italian Formula 4 and the Formula Regional European championship after moving to Italy aged 13 with his coach Francesco di Mauro.

Bortoleto’s family have considerable wealth, with his father Lincoln Oliveira getting rich in Brazil’s telecommunications industry in the 1990s. They are understood to have had close links with Brazil’s most recent debuting F1 driver, Felipe Nasr, on his way up the single-seater ranks before making his own F1 bow with Sauber back in 2015.

But that’s far from Bortoleto’s only existing tie to the top of the single-seater ladder, as he has been managed by Fernando Alonso’s A14 company since 2023.

Gabriel Bortoleto, Invicta Racing celebrates after winning the championship

Gabriel Bortoleto, Invicta Racing celebrates after winning the championship

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

A14 helped to secure his berth with the Trident team with which Bortoleto went on to win that year’s F3 title – taking two wins and one pole in the process.

He produced similar numbers in winning the 2024 F2 title with the Invicta squad (two wins, two poles), but what set him apart in both successful campaigns was his ability to bring home consistent points when his title rivals floundered through various stages.

By 2024, Bortoleto had joined the books at McLaren, which agreed to release him from his junior driver status to go to Sauber when the soon-to-be Audi squad came calling as 2024 concluded. McLaren will have no F1 seat openings until the end of 2026 at the earliest and Bortoleto had nowhere further to progress up the ladder.

McLaren team boss Andrea Stella spoke warmly of Bortoleto’s achievements last year, calling him “humble” and “at no point arrogant” – even when the 2024 F2 season started off with a struggle to adapt to the championship’s new spec car.

Alonso took a typically more bombastic approach compared to his former race engineer.

“I know there are a lot of talks about the young generation – a lot of rookies also next year, very talented all of them – but the best is Gabriel,” the Aston Martin driver said at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix last year. “He showed it on track with the same cars.”

When asked by Autosport how he would choose to introduce himself to F1 fans at the recent F175 Live event in London, Bortoleto replied: “I don’t know. I try to be myself as much as I can. I don’t try to be different.

Gabriel Bortoleto, Kick Sauber C45

Gabriel Bortoleto, Kick Sauber C45

Photo by: Sauber F1 Team

“Let’s say, when I’m on track or when I’m around cameras or whatever, I try to be who I am. Who I always was. You can say I try to be funny… (“But you are very funny,” interjected new Sauber team-mate Nico Hulkenberg) Thank you. I don’t know. I just try to be like this.

“And in the car, I believe I try to work very hard to achieve every dream I had. It was the same in Formula 3 and Formula 2. I work very hard to achieve the championships.

“A lot of days. Doing simulator work with the team. Spending time with engineers. So, I don’t think the approach will be different in Formula 1. That’s a little bit how I describe myself. But we will see this season. You will see and I don’t need to tell you because it’s even difficult for myself to speak about me.”

Hulkenberg felt he and Bortoleto bonded well during their initial sponsor commitments together in the off-season, ahead of what is expected to be a tricky campaign for the Sauber squad.

Nevertheless, Hulkenberg said Bortoleto had been “fast as hell” in Bahrain testing last month, where he also highlighted his team-mate’s abilities as a fast learner.

Elsewhere in the paddock at that event, Bortoleto’s willingness to criticise the changes to Testing of Previous Cars rules for 2025, which effectively make him one of the most unprepared F1 rookies ever in terms of mileage in older machinery combined with restricted pre-season test running, went down well in terms of the youngster showing a mature character.

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

Bortoleto now enters F1 with the weight of a motorsport-mad nation behind him. He’s well aware of the reaction granted to Argentina’s Franco Colapinto unexpected and memorable F1 run last year, which in turn raises expectations on what he might achieve in 2025.

Sauber’s likely struggles to escape Q1 on pace means he can make the expected rookie errors away from the strongest glare of the F1 media spotlight, but strong results against a driver as excellent as Hulkenberg could be the making of a long career at the top level.

Bortoleto arrives as a wealthy young racing driver looking to inspire Brazil through his charming character and racing speed. As an Ayrton Senna-like story goes, it’s already off to a solid start…

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Gabriel Bortoleto

Sauber

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

In the first of a new mini-series where Motorsport.com is delving into the burgeoning Formula 1 careers of the six 2025 rookies, today we’re introducing new Sauber driver Gabriel Bortoleto.

The 20-year-old hails from Sao Paulo and has already built an impressive junior motorsport career.

Like Charles Leclerc, George Russell and Oscar Piastri before him, Bortoleto arrives at the top tier having won back-to-back Formula 3 (known as GP3 when Leclerc and Russell won this title) and Formula 2 championships at the first attempt.

Before then, he produced decent returns in Italian Formula 4 and the Formula Regional European championship after moving to Italy aged 13 with his coach Francesco di Mauro.

Bortoleto’s family have considerable wealth, with his father Lincoln Oliveira getting rich in Brazil’s telecommunications industry in the 1990s. They are understood to have had close links with Brazil’s most recent debuting F1 driver, Felipe Nasr, on his way up the single-seater ranks before making his own F1 bow with Sauber back in 2015.

But that’s far from Bortoleto’s only existing tie to the top of the single seater ladder, as he has been managed by Fernando Alonso’s A14 company since 2023.

Gabriel Bortoleto, Invicta Racing celebrates after winning the championship

Gabriel Bortoleto, Invicta Racing celebrates after winning the championship

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

A14 helped to secure his berth with the Trident team with which Bortoleto went on to win that year’s F3 title – taking two wins and one pole in the process.

He produced similar numbers in winning the 2024 F2 title with the Invicta squad (two wins, two poles), but what set him apart in both successful campaigns was his ability to bring home consistent points when his title rivals floundered through various stages.

By 2024, Bortoleto had joined the books at McLaren, which agreed to release him from his junior driver status to go to Sauber when the soon-to-be Audi squad came calling as 2024 concluded. McLaren will have no F1 seat openings until the end of 2026 at the earliest and Bortoleto had nowhere further to progress up the ladder.

McLaren team boss Andrea Stella spoke warmly of Bortoleto’s achievements last year, calling him “humble” and “at no point arrogant” – even when the 2024 F2 season started off with a struggle to adapt to the championship’s new spec car.

Alonso took a typically more bombastic approach compared to his former race engineer.

“I know there are a lot of talks about the young generation – a lot of rookies also next year, very talented all of them – but the best is Gabriel,” the Aston Martin driver said at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix last year. “He showed it on track with the same cars.”

When asked by Motorsport.com how he would choose to introduce himself to F1 fans at the recent F175 Live event in London, Bortoleto replied: “I don’t know. I try to be myself as much as I can. I don’t try to be different.

Gabriel Bortoleto, Kick Sauber C45

Gabriel Bortoleto, Kick Sauber C45

Photo by: Sauber F1 Team

“Let’s say, when I’m on track or when I’m around cameras or whatever, I try to be who I am. Who I always was. You can say I try to be funny… (“But you are very funny,” interjected new Sauber team-mate Nico Hulkenberg) Thank you. I don’t know. I just try to be like this.

“And in the car, I believe I try to work very hard to achieve every dream I had. It was the same in Formula 3 and Formula 2. I work very hard to achieve the championships.

“A lot of days. Doing simulator work with the team. Spending time with engineers. So, I don’t think the approach will be different in Formula 1. That’s a little bit how I describe myself. But we will see this season. You will see and I don’t need to tell you because it’s even difficult for myself to speak about me.”

Hulkenberg felt he and Bortoleto bonded well during their initial sponsor commitments together in the off-season, ahead of what is expected to be a tricky campaign for the Sauber squad.

Nevertheless, Hulkenberg said Bortoleto had been “fast as hell” in Bahrain testing last month, where he also highlighted his team-mate’s abilities as a fast learner.

Elsewhere in the paddock at that event, Bortoleto’s willingness to criticise the changes to Testing of Previous Cars rules for 2025, which effectively make him one of the most unprepared F1 rookies ever in terms of mileage in older machinery combined with restricted pre-season test running, went down well in terms of the youngster showing a mature character.

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

Bortoleto now enters F1 with the weight of a motorsport-mad nation behind him. He’s well aware of the reaction granted to Argentina’s Franco Colapinto unexpected and memorable F1 run last year, which in turn raises expectations on what he might achieve in 2025.

Sauber’s likely struggles to escape Q1 on pace means he can make the expected rookie errors away from the strongest glare of the F1 media spotlight, but strong results against a driver as excellent as Hulkenberg could be the making of a long career at the top level.

Bortoleto arrives as a wealthy young racing driver looking to inspire Brazil through his charming character and racing speed. As an Ayrton Senna-like story goes, it’s already off to a solid start…

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Gabriel Bortoleto

Sauber

Be the first to know and subscribe for real-time news email updates on these topics

A crucial disclaimer after every Formula 1 testing session – including this week’s one – is that lap times say little.

Teams do not know each other’s exact programmes and this is even more true for outsiders. In particular, single-lap times say very little, as no team is showing its full hand yet while both fuel levels and engine modes are a big variable.

However, the long-run pace calculated by our data partner PACETEQ says more, especially when combined with GPS data and top speeds that can reveal a bit more about engine modes and possible sandbagging.

It means that the data does show a pattern in the end, of course with all the usual reservations and the note that teams will develop their cars towards the 2025 season opener in Melbourne on 14-16 March.

But as things stand, which F1 team ranks where after pre-season testing at the Bahrain International Circuit?

10. Sauber

Nico Hulkenberg, Kick Sauber C45

Nico Hulkenberg, Kick Sauber C45

Photo by: Sauber F1 Team

It is a common belief across the F1 paddock that Sauber remains bottom of the pecking order, having finished last in the 2024 championship.

The C45 looks unstable and at the circuit’s double left, Turns 9 and 10, the Sauber drivers’ lines were different each lap with the car unable to do what Nico Hulkenberg and Gabriel Bortoleto wanted it to do.

Sauber’s long runs were also unimpressive with an average gap of 1.3 seconds per lap. But, this comes as little surprise because much of its focus is already on 2026, when Sauber will morph into the Audi F1 Team to kickstart the next era of technical regulations.

9. Racing Bulls

Yuki Tsunoda, RB F1 Team

Yuki Tsunoda, RB F1 Team

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

Although in a livery ranking Racing Bulls would be near the top, the 2025 F1 campaign is expected to be a difficult one for the Italian outfit.

Its driver Yuki Tsunoda confirmed this belief, as he explained that the team is in a weaker position now than it was one year ago in comparison to its rivals. So, the Japanese driver expects the team to struggle to score points in the opening rounds of 2025.

Racing Bulls’ long run pace was not too bad though, with an average gap of around one second per lap to McLaren. Tsuonda is still playing it cautiously and he will have a rookie team-mate this year in Isack Hadjar, who replaces now Red Bull driver Liam Lawson.

8. Haas

Esteban Ocon, Haas F1 Team

Esteban Ocon, Haas F1 Team

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

The margins between the midfield teams remain extremely small, which makes it difficult to position said squads in an exact ranking. 

The same goes for Haas, who did not really show a clear picture in the first two days of testing. It did produce some long runs with new signing Esteban Ocon on the final day, but it was not with a full tank or full race simulation. 

Ocon was over a second slower than McLaren in Paceteq’s numbers, but showed relatively little tyre degradation. It is what characterised Haas in 2024 and the American outfit seems to be building on it. 

7. Aston Martin

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin Racing

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin Racing

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

Aston Martin is firmly focusing on the regulation overhaul in 2026, as it has signed legendary F1 car designer Adrian Newey while Honda is set to arrive as a power unit supplier. 

But, a team that’s as ambitious as the Silverstone-based outfit will be reluctant to see 2025 turn into a torturous campaign yet pre-season testing was not impressive.

Of course, Lance Stroll’s physical condition did not help forcing Aston Martin to switch its approach on the final day, but at no point did the British team really show a glimpse of speed or potential.

The car seemed stable when watching trackside at Turns 9 and 10, but both the short and long runs were not particularly quick.

6. Williams

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Carlos Sainz, Williams

Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images

Williams was a positive surprise of the three-day test in Bahrain, even though the squad has made no secret of its focus mainly being on 2026.

But its new driver line-up of four-time grand prix winner Carlos Sainz and double podium sitter Alex Albon has no doubt helped things. Sainz, who recently joined from Ferrari, has integrated himself into the team rather nicely and Williams boss James Vowles has been impressed by his feedback and experience.

Although Williams’ single-lap times offer little detail, its long-run pace compared to fellow midfield squads is relatively good. The British outfit had a productive test without any significant problems, so it looks set to become a serious player within the midfield.

5. Alpine

Pierre Gasly, Alpine

Pierre Gasly, Alpine

Photo by: Alpine

F1 has four teams which are significantly ahead, so fifth-place is simply a case of ‘best of the rest’.

Alpine seems favourite for that tag after an impressive testing session, which marks a remarkable turnaround from 12 months ago when it had an overweight car. But that weight has now gone so Alpine’s pace looks promising and in the calculated long runs, Pierre Gasly was around six-tenths slower than the leaders. 

There was a significant difference between Gasly and his rookie team-mate Jack Doohan though, so an unbalanced driver line-up unlike Williams may come back to haunt.

4. Mercedes

George Russell, Mercedes

George Russell, Mercedes

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

George Russell was roughly at Ferrari’s level in the long runs, as the Mercedes car looked relatively stable while watching trackside and the team suffered no major setbacks.

There being no setbacks is of course the most important thing at winter testing, especially as Russell previously indicated that Mercedes does not want to fall into the poor development trap of recent years.

Currently, there are no signs that that will happen in 2025 but Mercedes is still slightly behind on pace compared to the reigning constructors’ champion squad McLaren. 

Alongside Russell will be rookie Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who had a solid pre-season test. ‘Solid’ is also the word that goes with Mercedes’ test as a collective.

3. Ferrari

Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari SF-25

Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari SF-25

Photo by: Ferrari

Expectations for Ferrari this year are high, as it has added to a runner-up finish in 2024 with the signing of seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton.

So, the Scuderia is of course aiming to end its 17-year championship drought but its long-run pace in Bahrain was not particularly impressive.

Ferrari lost time on the straights, which may indicate something about engine modes while Hamilton started a race simulation on Friday and aborted it after 12 laps.

The times and tyre degradation put him over four tenths behind McLaren, according to Paceteq, which was similar to team-mate Charles Leclerc a day earlier. More to come from Ferrari.

2. Red Bull

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

It is pretty close between the top teams making it somewhat difficult to judge. But on Wednesday, Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko and the four-time, reigning world champion Max Verstappen showed great optimism about the RB21.

Marko said its balance problems had been largely fixed, while Verstappen added that he is yet to encounter any negative surprises with this year’s challenger. But, the Dutchman is still adamant that there is more work to be done with technical director Pierre Wache sharing said belief. 

A full race simulation was also only completed by new driver Liam Lawson, who was seven-tenths short of McLaren’s Lando Norris. But if that were Verstappen in the car, the gap would have no doubt been less putting Red Bull just behind McLaren.

1. McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren

Lando Norris, McLaren

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

Reigning champion McLaren is the clear favourite for the 2025 F1 season. Speaking to members of the paddock, the consensus is that nobody really knows how far behind the rest may be and when looking at the data “it could be two-tenths, three-tenths or five-tenths”.

Nonetheless, McLaren has impressed and particularly when one considers the long run that Norris completed on Thursday. The 2024 drivers’ championship runner-up was consistently fast and the onboard footage may scare rivals even more. 

Competitors are also looking at McLaren’s 2025 car with interest. Red Bull, for instance, called McLaren’s new front suspension ‘interesting, but also risky’. More specifically, that’s about what McLaren is doing with the positioning of the wishbones and anti-dive. So far, it all seems to be working and at a track McLaren has found difficult in recent years.

Pecking order F1 Testing

Pecking order F1 Testing

In this article

Ronald Vording

Formula 1

Lewis Hamilton

Max Verstappen

Pierre Gasly

George Russell

Charles Leclerc

Lando Norris

Liam Lawson

Oscar Piastri

Gabriel Bortoleto

Andrea Kimi Antonelli

Ferrari

Red Bull Racing

Mercedes

Sauber

McLaren

Alpine

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Formula 1 is about to host its first-ever season livery launch party in London. Technically the event is called “F1 75 Live at The O2” — landing, as it is, at the outset of the 75th season in the sport’s history. At the centerpiece of the event, all 10 F1 teams will take their turn unveiling their car (or their car’s main livery, at least) for the 2025 season — on a stage, in a massive arena, as well as in front of a global audience of millions. 

Given this is the first-ever event of it kind, the only concrete details we have are the ones we’ve been given by F1 itself.

Here’s everything you need to know about the F1 75 Live event at The O2 Arena in London:

When is the F1 75 Live event?

Everything kicks off at 5:30pm GMT, and the event is scheduled to last for five hours. 

How can I watch it?

 

Unless you were one of the lucky few to grab arena tickets in the literal minutes before they sold out, you can watch along on F1’s YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook pages.

What is the plan for the F1 75 Live event?

Traditionally, each team pulls the covers off its new cars in their own ways: a racetrack with a few media in attendance, or in more recent (and boring) ways, as an email or social media post with a few images of the new car’s paintwork and some canned driver quotes.

This time, Formula 1 has stepped in to bring all the teams together on one night in London in front of a live audience with musical acts, streaming the show for free. Though the event is fronting F1’s 75th anniversary, think of F1 75 Live more as an opening ceremony than a birthday party. 

More importantly, it’s F1’s chance to build up — and, possibly, better control — the biggest moment before cars hit the track for pre-season testing. By turning the normally workaday livery launches into a spectacle, there’s a chance to invent something of a 25th audience-friendly event in a schedule already stuffed with races. And, given the musical performances (more on those in a moment), there’s a chance to do something that’s a little more loose, and globally pop cultural, than the usual nose-down focus of a race weekend. 

How will the event go?

All 20 drivers will be there, plus the team bosses — as well as, of course, the new 2025 F1 cars.

Each team will have a seven minute segment on the O2 stage to do what they wish, meaning we are in for a range of interpretations when it comes to a livery launch. It’s worth noting: in advance of F1 75 Live, we’ve already seen both Williams and McLaren unveil their car designs — but not the liveries the cars will wear. For the other eight teams, everything we see will be new.

The running order will be the reverse of last season’s constructors’ championship standings, meaning the evening will kick off with Sauber and end with McLaren.

If you’re doing the math, 10 teams multiplied by seven minutes doesn’t nearly fill up a five-hour arena-sized production. That’s where the host and musical acts come into play.

What artists are performing at F1 75 Live?

F1 75 Live's musical line-up

F1 75 Live’s musical line-up

Photo by: Formula 1

F1 finally announced the event’s musical line-up on Monday, and it’s quite the varied bill. There’s American country singer Kane Brown and rapper mgk (formerly known as Machine Gun Kelly), who had a famous interaction with Sky F1’s Martin Brundle during the 2023 Sao Paulo GP that led to the two falling out.

Also performing are UK pop legends Take That, who these days perform as a trio, minus Robbie Williams.

Composer Bryan Tyler, who produced the F1 theme, will also provide the musical backdrop.

Who is hosting?

F1 75 Live Host

F1 75 Live Host

Photo by: Formula 1

The main emcee for the evening is Jack Whitehall, a London-born comedian and actor who is likely unrecognisable to the rest of the world save those who have seen “Jungle Cruise.”

Of course, since this is an F1 event, we’ll also see familiar faces from its broadcast channels, including Laura Winter and Lawrence Barretto. One we won’t see: Will Buxton, who left F1 TV to join Fox Sport’s IndyCar coverage for 2025.

Is there a way to make Lewis Hamilton central to this moment?

Absolutely. The F1 75 Live event will be Lewis Hamilton’s first public appearance with Ferrari. Expect this to generate its own flurry of headlines and social posts. 

What about the other 19 teams and drivers?

Every team, aside from McLaren and Aston Martin, have a new driver lineup in whole or in part, so we’ll get to see drivers wearing new uniforms and how those relationships are building up.

What’s the deal with the O2 Arena?

The O2 Arena is a large, multi-purpose arena located in east London, sitting beside the River Thames. It has the third-highest seating capacity of any indoor venue in the UK, with a capacity of 20,000. Originally it was called the Millennium Dome, but given how time operates, that quickly turned into a white elephant until sponsorship arrived from communication firm O2.

Whatever the name, the arena was (in 2023) the third-busiest music in the world, behind New York’s Madison Square Garden and the Movistar Arena in Chile. Which is to say, F1 didn’t skimp on the party’s location.

 

 

In this article

Ben Hunt

Formula 1

Culture

Fernando Alonso

Lewis Hamilton

Nico Hulkenberg

Carlos Sainz

Max Verstappen

Esteban Ocon

Pierre Gasly

Lance Stroll

George Russell

Charles Leclerc

Alex Albon

Lando Norris

Liam Lawson

Jack Doohan

Isack Hadjar

Yuki Tsunoda

Oscar Piastri

Oliver Bearman

Gabriel Bortoleto

Andrea Kimi Antonelli

Ferrari

Red Bull Racing

Mercedes

Sauber

McLaren

Racing Bulls

Williams

Aston Martin Racing

Haas F1 Team

Alpine

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Six drivers will embark on their first full Formula 1 seasons this year – the most newcomers since 2013.

Half of the half-dozen don’t have a single start to their names yet, while the other three have already experienced the thrill of lining up on a grand prix grid at least once.

But all of them are striving for the same goal: to secure their place at the pinnacle of motorsport. Which of them has the best chance of staying there?

Liam Lawson

Previous F1 grand prix starts: 11

Liam Lawson is Red Bull’s latest attempt to solve the thorny problem of who belongs in a Formula 1 team alongside Max Verstappen. He is the first member of their young driver programme to get the opportunity since mid-2019.

Liam Lawson, Red Bull, Mugello, 2024
Lawson is next to face F1’s toughest team mate

On that occasion Alexander Albon (who had already previously been dropped and then rehired by Red Bull) was brought in to replace Pierre Gasly, who lasted just 12 rounds with Verstappen. Albon was given a year and a half before Red Bull decided he couldn’t cut it and hired Sergio Perez, who had just been cut loose by Racing Point (now Aston Martin).

Red Bull’s sudden faith in Lawson makes it all the more curious that they passed up previous opportunities to give him more F1 experience, particularly at the start of 2023, when they initially placed him in Japan’s Super Formula series and gave a seat at their second team to outsider Nyck de Vries.

The return of Daniel Ricciardo later that year kept Lawson queued up waiting even longer for valuable F1 seat time. As a result, he will spend his first races alongside Verstappen learning several unfamiliar tracks.

Given that, will Red Bull be more patient with Lawson than they were with the likes of Gasly? If not, given this team’s track record, expect mid-season speculation about a potential swap with either of the Racing Bulls drivers, or even someone else.

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Andrea Kimi Antonelli

Previous F1 grand prix starts: 0

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Monza, 2024
Mercedes gave Antonelli plenty of seat time

Mercedes’ bold decision to promote total newcomer Andrea Kimi Antonelli is a stark contrast to their past approach.

George Russell, Antonelli’s new team mate, had to serve three years’ apprenticeship at Williams before getting his chance. His predecessor Valtteri Bottas did four (and only got his chance in 2017 because Nico Rosberg walked out after winning the championship).

However Mercedes have taken great care both to downplay expectations of Antonelli ahead of his debut and ensure he has had the maximum possible seat time ahead of it. He began a programme driving their older F1 cars last year. His crash five laps into his first appearance in an F1 practice session did nothing to deter Mercedes – he was confirmed as Lewis Hamilton’s replacement the very next day.

The team has shown every indication it will take its time over bedding in Antonelli, who stands to be the third-youngest F1 driver of all time. That will go some way towards easing the pressure on him, but this nonetheless a huge ask for a rookie, especially if Mercedes produce a potentially race-winning car.

Jack Doohan

Previous F1 grand prix starts: 1

Jack Doohan, Alpine, Yas Marina, 2024
Doohan made an early debut in last year’s finale

Unlike Lawson or Antonelli, Jack Doohan won’t expect to begin the season with a potentially race-winning car. But that doesn’t necessarily mean the pressure on him will be lower.

Alpine announced Doohan’s promotion in August last year. But soon afterwards Franco Colapinto’s debut at Williams caught the eye, and rumours followed that Alpine were keen to secure his services, potentially as a race driver. Last month Alpine announced they had reached a deal with Williams to bring Colapinto on board as their third reserve driver in addition to Paul Aron and Ryo Hirakawa.

Doohan was handed the chance to make his F1 debut one race early in last year’s finale. But Alpine consultant Flavio Briatore’s damning-with-faint-praise assessment “for the first race it was okay” will have been ringing in Doohan’s ears throughout the off-season.

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Oliver Bearman

Previous F1 grand prix starts: 3

Oliver Bearman, Haas, Baku City Circuit, 2024
Bearman has already raced twice for Haas

It’s rare for a driver to get three one-off appearances in Formula 1 before making their ‘proper’ debut. Indeed, Oliver Bearman achieved a unique feat by scoring points in his first two F1 starts with two different teams.

The first of those came at the punishing Jeddah Corniche Circuit as an 11th-hour replacement for Carlos Sainz Jnr at no less a team than Ferrari. Bearman, still only 18 at the time, passed his first test in style.

He already knows Haas well, having started two races for them and appeared in several practice sessions. He can expect to find himself in the cut and thrust of the midfield, but last year’s experience of the pressures of a real race weekend will be invaluable. His former F2 team mate Antonelli may have landed a top drive for his debut, but Bearman has the chance to play himself in at a midfield team while backers Ferrari keep an eye on his progress.

Isack Hadjar

Previous F1 grand prix starts: 0

Isack Hadjar, Red Bull, Yas Marina, 2024 post-season test
Hadjar missed F2 title but landed F1 chance

The wheels are turning on Red Bull’s conveyor belt of young talent again. After the diversions of running the likes of Ricciardo and De Vries, Racing Bulls (as they are now known) are back in the role of promoting the team’s junior talent.

Isack Hadjar’s CV lacks the conspicuous achievement of a junior championship title, but he showed plenty of pace in Formula 2 last year and some poor luck harmed his bid for the crown.

However, this is Red Bull, so he will experience pressure from all sides. He is up against a driver with four years’ experience who is burning to show Red Bull erred by overlooking him. And coming up behind him is Arvid Lindblad, who is poised to clinch the Formula Regional Oceania championship before making his Formula 2 debut, and has already been talked up by the Red Bull top brass.

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Gabriel Bortoleto

Previous F1 grand prix starts: 0

Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber, Yas Marina, 2024 post-season test
Former McLaren junior Bortoleto debuts at Sauber

Sauber face a transition year having finished last in the championship in 2024. They have swapped both their drivers and are preparing to become Audi’s works team next year.

Gabriel Bortoleto therefore faces less pressure than some rookies. But Bortoleto, previously a McLaren junior driver, is up against a tricky team mate in Nico Hulkenberg. If the Sauber is no more competitive than it was last year, the driver who enters F1 with back-to-back junior titles to his name will have to be content with fighting for scraps in his first season.

Over to you

Which of F1’s six rookies do you have the highest expectations of? Share your views in the comments.

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